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— PAGE THREE —
Stockton's
Eddies
southern California
SUMNER NEWS
— PAGE FOUR —
Jefferson's
Letter
Tuesday,-July 8, 1952
Tussdari July K 1052
FRANK ANDERSON . . . lead role
rama Dept, lates Show
“Dangerous Comer” by J. B. IFiestley will be the summer pro-'JJSfcjction of the drama department, Pf^Tfaerbert M. Stahl, director of the announced yesterday.
Froduc.flyon dates are July 24, 25, and 26 €fn Bovard auditorium.
Frank\ Anderson, head of the department of drama at Creighton univerlsit.v, Omaha, Neb., will play the l<*ad role of Robert Chat-field. A
Repeat
Anderson appeared in the Bovard production of “Libel" last summer, also directed by Dr. [ji Stahl. This spring he won the Dorothy McGuire-Henry Fonda award for the best acting award of the season at the Omaha Community Playhouse.
A citizen of Denmark, Anderson came to the United States in 1938/ studying at the University °f Apwa, UCLA, and privately un-de-Atutorship ot the late Russian piracter actress Maria Ouspens-iya, before coming to SC.
Director Too A performer at the Hedge Row theater in Philadelphia, a resident repertoire company, Anderson also directed ■“The Miser” and ‘‘Shadow and Substance” at Creighton university.
“Dangerous Corner” is a combination of a mystery play and a psychological study, Dr. Stahl said. It shows how the gradual revelation of the truth about a murdered man disrupts his family and friends, and shows them up for tho rotters they really are.
Tickets for the production are available at the univefsity ticket office. Orchestra seats are $1 and balcony seats 50 cents.
URA Sets Program For Week
University Recreation association activities slated for the coming week are still open to all students and faculty members, Dr. Tilman Hall, director of education, announced yesterday.
Reservations for five deep-sea fishing berths aboard the special chartered boat still are available. The ocean voyage off Catalina island is scheduled for Saturday, July 12. Reservations may be made at the URA 'office, 112 PE, according to Dr. Hall.
Also on tap is a luncheon tomorrow at noon for all physical education students. Dr. Charles 1C. Forsythe will speak on future predictions for high school athletics.
Michigan Head
Dr. Forsythe is director of physical education for the state of Michigan.
The luncheon will be held in the patio of the PE building and will be 35 cents per person.
An all-university badminton tournament is scheduled for tonight in the gymnasium. Students and faculty members interested in competing may do so at the URA office. Registration for participants will not close until this evening, Dr. I-Itffl said.
Wide Program “Additional activities for the week include a trip to the Huntington library and art gallery Friday, July It, from 1 to 4:30 p.m. and the summer faculty-student dance the same evening.”
Bob Feldman and his ‘New-tones’ will again furnish the music, Dr. Hall said. Admission to the annual affair is 60 cents per person.
Official
Notice
Ed. Coeds Tea-Time
All women students in the field of education are cordially invited to the tea this afternoon from 2 until 4:30 in the chancellor’s suite in the Administration building by Sigma chapter of Pi Lambda Theta, national honorary education fraternity for women.
Pi Lambda Theta’s membership includes both students at SC and alumnae active in the teaching profession who have superior scholarship and leadership qualities.
Mrs. Win! Clare Davis, chair man of arrangements for the tea, is being assisted by Mesdames Marie York, Frances Grinnell, Inez Bradford, Marcia Bonsail, and Misses Carolyn Schiller, Beverly Mason, and Joyce Wilson.
Honored guests at the tea will include Dr. and Mrs. Osman R. Hull, Dr. and Mrs. D. Welty Le-Fever, Dr. Irving Mclbo, faculty
A meeting will be held Thursday, July 10, at 1:15 p.m. in 305 Administration for all students who plan to enroll in the field work courses, Ed Ad 529 and 559. The necessary instructions for the completion of these courses will he given at the meeting.
OSMAN R. HI LL Dean, School of Education
A Parking Elegy for Summer Students
THE PARKING struggle facing Summer Session students daily is headache enough without having to face the pro*b-lem of untangling your car from the maze of mechanical creatures blocking the aisles and exit route. Students can take advantage of free parking on Coliseum lots, at the Menlo, Vermont, and Exposition street intersection. Walking distance is lengthened slightly, time consumed "jockeying" for space shortened considerably.
Coming Calendar
Lecture
Dr. John D. Robins, professor of English at Victoria college, University of Toronto, will speak on ‘Angry Humor” Thursday afternoon at 3:15 in 229 Founders.
♦ * *
Film Classic*
“M,” starring Peter Lorre, will be the third film classics, showing tonight at 8 in 133 Founders.
* * *
Topical Series "Significance of Oriental Philosophy” will be the topic of the regular Tuesday lecture series in 229 Founders at 3:15 p.m. tomorrow. Dr. Charles A. Moore, professor of philosophy, University of Hawaii, will be the speaker.
* • •
Mixer
A social mixer dance, presented by the University Recreation association, will be held Thursday from 8 p.m. to 12 midnight in the Physical Education building. Public invited.
* • •
Festival
The third concert in the fifth annual festival of contemporary arts will Ix? given by the SC School of Music tomorrow at 8:30 p.m. in Hancock auditorium. A concert of chamber music will be given, featuring the Bovard quartet.
WINIFRED DAVIS . . . chairman
advisers for the chapter; Edwarda White, counselor of women; Miss Thelma Barnes; and Mrs. Tema Clare,
Mrs. Lena Moon Morgan will provide the background music.
Notice
All graduate women on campus this summer who are members of Phi Delta Gamma at colleges other than SC are urged td send their names, addresses and telephone numbers to Jane V/ara-boldt, speech dpartment.
• * *
Fellowship The speaker at Trojan Christian Fellowship’s meeting this week will be Roland Hill, vice-president of the India Bible league and for 30 years a missionary to India.
Mr. Hill’s topic will continue the theme, “Religion or Reality?” being used as a focal point for thought. Everyone is invited to the regular weekly session' tomorrow at 12:10 p.m. upstairs in the YWCA. Bob Mannes will lead the Thursday noon Bible study.
Bach Inventions Set for Concert
Thirty of the two- and thr^e-part inventions written by Johann Sebastian Bach for his sons to use as teaching materials will be played in a free public concert by Prof. Alice Ehlers, harpsichordist, at 8 30 p.m. Sunday in Hancock auditorium at SC.
Professor Ehlers has consulted many manuscripts in preparing for this concert. She has noted the corrections made by Bach, and incorporated them into her interpretation of the pieces.
Professor Ehlers also will be on the program of the annual Bach festival in Carmel July 17-19 when the whole Bach cycle of sonatas for harpsichord and violin will be playi-d for the first time in 15 years.
Alec Murray will be the violinist.
Tea Party At Home of Chancellor
The home of Chancellor Rufus
B. von KleinSmid at 17 Chester place will be the scene of a tea tomorrow from 3 to 5 p.m. honoring wives of visiting professors in the SC Summer Session and wives of executives of the Santa Fe railway who are attending the Institute of Business Economics at SC.
In the receiving line will be Mrs. Harry J. Deuel Jr., Mrs. John D. Cooke, and Chancellor von KleinSmid. Mmes. Richard Winzler, Osman R. Hull, Lawrence
C. Lockley and Carl Hancey will pour.
Members of the new board of the Faculty Wives club who will serve as hostesses will include Mmes. Dwight L. Bolinger, Kenneth L. Trefftzs, William B. Mc-Coard, Robert C. Merz, Wendell E. Cannon, E. Bryant Phillips, Arthur W. Adamson, Thomas Clements, William D. Vennard, Lynn Clarke, Frederick J. Moore, Richard W. Van Alstyne, Robert Marsteller, E. Kent Springer, and Victor R. B. Oafcchlager.
Student Parking In Coliseum Lots Free
The nemesis of Summer Session and regular session students . . . parking.
Prowling the campus in automobiles frantically looking for a parking spot while time for classes looms near, students have discovered that headaches incurred in class are partly attributable to the pre-class struggle.
Student lots are located behind ihe Law building, the Engineering building, and “The Wheel.” Reserved faculty lots are behind Bridge hall and to the rear of the Inlormation building. All are on a • first-come-first-parked" basis.
Coliseum Free
Of special importance to. students familiar with the parking jam experienced daily is the Coliseum lot at the Menlo avenue, Exposition and Vermont streets intersection. Open free of charge fpr student parking except during Coliseum events, the lot is within close walking distance of the campus.
Parking violations can be avoided by adhering to rules and regulations in effect on campus.
Tickets
Campus police will issue tickets t.o all oars parked in, or blocking, any driveway. The driveways are reserved for business and commercial use only.
Cars blocking aisles in university parking lots (see pic at left) are also fair game for the campus police. Albert F. Zech, counselor of men, said a fair amount of consideration for the rights of others would keep drivers ticket free in the parking lots, but warned that violators would be tagged.
LAPD Action
All students receiving tickets, from campus police will be required to report to the counselor of men.
The Los Angeles Police Department handles speeding, reckless driving, and all parking violations on the public streets.
No parking is allowed at any time on University avenue.* Angle parking in unmarked lanes, red zones, and driveways will also result in $5 “yellow slips of greeting” from the LAPD.
Official
Notice
Students who expect to complete the requirements for teaching or administration credentials with the University recommendation on Aug. 1 or 31, should make application at once.
Application forms are available ln Room 357, Administration building, from 9 to 11:30 a.m. and from 2 to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Those who will finish Aug. 31, must return theirs by Aug. 4, if prompt delivery of the credentials is to be made.
OSAJAN R. HULL,
Dean, School of Education